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The SmartEiffel Team |
The SmartEiffel Team is an informal group of people in the LORIA lab of Nancy, France, gathered around the development of new compilation techniques for object-oriented languages and their implementation in SmartEiffel, The GNU Eiffel compiler.
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Dominique COLNET is the one who initiated the SmartEiffel project
in Summer 1994. His goal was to create an inexpensive, bug-free
advanced Eiffel compiler, unlike those already available on the market. |
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Suzanne COLLIN has been working on SmartEiffel from the very beginning,
taking a major part in conceptual and design discussions and decisions. |
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He started working during most of his spare time with Dominique
on SmallEiffel in late 1994 - early 1995. He had many important
conceptual and technical discussions with Dominique about languages,
typing, ANSI C, Java bytecode, garbage collection, etc. and worked on
the first bootstrap. He also tries to maintain the SmartEiffel Web
site.
He joined the ECOO research team in late 1997 to work almost full-time
for his PhD on SmallEiffel, which he got with highest honors in late
2000.
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He started working on SmallEiffel before the first public release and never
stop to use and debug the compiler (mainly the library).
He made the first port on non-UNIX system: MS-DOS.
He joined the SmallEiffel team in summer 2001, working full-time on the
project. The main aim is to developp the graphic library. He worked on
other aspects like SCOOP for example.
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Former but Still Active Team Members |
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After being a student of Dominique, and in charge of the Macintosh-ready
versions of SmallEiffel during his free-time since 1996, Philippe joined the
SmallEiffel team of the ECOO research team between February and September 1998
for his Master thesis. He worked more especially on the garbage collector.
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Other Contributors |
Many people have contributed to SmartEiffel, The GNU Eiffel Compiler.
The first of them, in chronological order, are the computer science students of the University Henri Poincaré of Nancy, France. They tested and benchmarked it, providing very useful information in the early days of SmartEiffel.
Then, many people, either working in computer engineering or computer science, or simply users working in various academic and business fields, took part in the process of improving SmartEiffel. Since it became The GNU Eiffel Compiler, in early 1998, even more people are helping its development.
We want to thank all these people who help us in this great adventure. Although it is not possible to mention them all, here is a short list of the most important contributors.